Text/HTML




News

Features

Latest

Feeds




Text/HTML

NEW ENGLAND DISTRICT

SlideShow

Paddlers hit whitewater rapids during the 52nd Annual River Rat Race April 12 on the Athol-Orange section of the Millers River in Massachusetts. Water was released by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from both Birch Hill and Tully Lake dams in Royalston with flows of approximately 1,100 cubic feet per second (cfs) from Birch Hill Dam and 300 cfs from Tully Lake Dam for the event, according to Project Manager Jeffrey Mangum in Royalston.
The New England District and Tantara Associated Corporation installed fall protection barricade railings all over Fort Rodman, New Bedford, Massachusetts.

ArticleCS

Honoring 'Those Who Served' during Concord flag retirement ceremony

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, New England District
Published Nov. 11, 2014
Col. Christopher Barron marches in the procession into Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.  Col. Barron represented the New England District in the Flag Retirement Ceremony held on Veterans Day at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Mass.  Col. Barron spoke to the crowd urging everyone to honor Veterans, not just on Veterans Day, but every day.

Col. Christopher Barron marches in the procession into Sleepy Hollow Cemetery. Col. Barron represented the New England District in the Flag Retirement Ceremony held on Veterans Day at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Mass. Col. Barron spoke to the crowd urging everyone to honor Veterans, not just on Veterans Day, but every day.

The Concord Minutemen move into position during the parade into Sleepy Hollow Cemetery Col. Christopher Barron represented the New England District in the Flag Retirement Ceremony held on Veterans Day at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Mass.  Col. Barron spoke to the crowd urging everyone to honor Veterans, not just on Veterans Day, but every day.

The Concord Minutemen move into position during the parade into Sleepy Hollow Cemetery Col. Christopher Barron represented the New England District in the Flag Retirement Ceremony held on Veterans Day at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Mass. Col. Barron spoke to the crowd urging everyone to honor Veterans, not just on Veterans Day, but every day.

The Middlesex County 4-H Fife & Drum Corps perform musical selections during the Flag Retirement Ceremony  Col. Christopher Barron represented the New England District in the Flag Retirement Ceremony held on Veterans Day at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Mass.  Col. Barron spoke to the crowd urging everyone to honor Veterans, not just on Veterans Day, but every day.

The Middlesex County 4-H Fife & Drum Corps perform musical selections during the Flag Retirement Ceremony Col. Christopher Barron represented the New England District in the Flag Retirement Ceremony held on Veterans Day at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Mass. Col. Barron spoke to the crowd urging everyone to honor Veterans, not just on Veterans Day, but every day.

The Middlesex County 4-H Fife & Drum Corps perform musical selections during the Flag Retirement Ceremony.  Col. Christopher Barron represented the New England District in the Flag Retirement Ceremony held on Veterans Day at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Mass.  Col. Barron spoke to the crowd urging everyone to honor Veterans, not just on Veterans Day, but every day.

The Middlesex County 4-H Fife & Drum Corps perform musical selections during the Flag Retirement Ceremony. Col. Christopher Barron represented the New England District in the Flag Retirement Ceremony held on Veterans Day at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Mass. Col. Barron spoke to the crowd urging everyone to honor Veterans, not just on Veterans Day, but every day.

Col. Christopher Barron, New England District Commander, joined Concord, Massachusetts town officials, state representatives and residents in the annual Veterans Day Flag Retirement Ceremony held, Nov. 11.

The official procession began at the Prichard Gate of the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery. Col. Barron and parade marshal, Chief Warrant Officer 2 (CW2) Robert Norton of the Massachusetts National Guard, lead Veterans and military representatives, bagpipers, the 4-H Fife and Drum Corps, the Concord Minutemen and Concord Independent Battery, clergy, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, youth groups as well as selectmen and government officials through the cemetery to the cemetery flagpole for the official presentation.

“Veterans Day, for me, is a time for reflection, appreciation and reverent celebration,” he said. “It’s a time for the nation, and each of us – its citizens – to remember those citizen-Soldiers who throughout our history have made the sacrifice to serve in the United States Armed Forces and defend the nation.”

The District Commander reminded the audience that the freedom that all Americans enjoy is not free and that Veterans all over the country have been the ones who have stepped up to pay for it. “The price of our freedom is paid for with the dedication of the service and in some cases the lives of our citizens,” he said. “Across the globe, Patriots of the U.S. Armed Forces – America’s sons and daughters – our nation’s dearest treasure – protect our freedom with their blood, sweat and tears.”

Following the speeches, patriotic musical selections and invocation, the actual retirement of the American flags commenced. Residents lined up in front of several flaming barrels, one hand on top of the flag and one on the bottom, to reverently present them to the flag receiver who placed them into the flames. Piper Adam Holdaway played musical selections during the ceremony. The Concord Independent Battery fired cannons between songs.

Colleen Giddings, member of Concord's Public Ceremonies and Celebrations Committee and Master of Ceremonies for the event, explained the significance of the flag retirement ceremony. “When the American flag, the symbol of our nation, is in such condition that it no longer is a fitting emblem for display, it should not be simply cast aside or discarded in any way that might be viewed as disrespectful, but should be destroyed in a dignified way, preferably by burning,” she said.

According to Giddings, the tradition of the flag retirement ceremony in Concord began in 1965 when a group of residents proposed that the ceremony take place every year before winter arrived.

While residents waited in line for their flags to be retired, Giddings reminded them of why the American flag is so significant and why Americans should treat it with great respect. “It is red because of human sacrifice,” she said. “It is blue because of the true blue loyalty of its defenders. It is white to symbolize liberty – our land of the free. The stars are symbols of the united efforts and hope in the hearts of people striving for a greater, nobler America.”

During the event, Col. Barron spoke with Veterans who marched in the procession and brought flags to be retired. Col. Barron said that honoring Veterans does not have to be limited to just one day. “I urge you to remember our Veterans, today and throughout the year,” he said. “Remember their sacrifices and remember how much they loved their nation, so much so that they took up arms to defend it – in peace and in war. As I say this, our great nation has men and women of all our Armed Services deployed around the world, putting their lives on the line to preserve our freedom … every single day.”

The Pawcatuck River Coastal Storm Risk Management Feasibility Study

 While our social media platforms are open forums, they are also intended to be family friendly, so please keep your comments and posts clean. You participate at your own risk, taking personal responsibility for your comments, your username and any information provided. 

Posts will be removed, and users may be banned permanently if they violate any of the guidelines listed below.

• Do not post graphic, obscene, explicit or racial comments. We also do not allow comments that are abusive, hateful, vindictive or intended to defame anyone or any organization.

• Do not post any solicitations (ex: asking users to "like" your Facebook page, visit your website, sign a petition).

• Do not post advertisements, prize contests or giveaways. This includes promotion or endorsement of any financial, commercial or non-governmental agency. Similarly, we do not allow attempts to defame or defraud any financial, commercial or non-governmental agency.

• Do not post details about an ongoing investigation or legal or administrative proceeding that could prejudice the processes or could interfere with an individual's rights will be deleted from this page.

• Apparent spamming or trolling will be removed and may cause the author(s) to be blocked from the page without notice.

• Do not post copyrighted or trademarked images or graphics. Imagery posted on the social media should be owned by the user.

• Do not post comments, photos or videos that suggest or encourage illegal activity.

• Do not post political propaganda.

• Do not post documents of any kind.

• All information posted to social media sites will be unclassified. No FOUO (for official use only), or classified information should ever be posted.

Also, the appearance of external links or the use of third-party applications on social media platforms does not constitute official endorsement on behalf of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Army or Department of Defense.

You are encouraged to quote, republish or share any content on our social media platforms on your own blog, Web site or other communication/publication. If you do so, please credit the Army unit or the person who authored the content as a courtesy.

 

Trending

NewsBusters